Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, told the Times Magazine that during talks with former Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, who had to resign due to corruption charges, Olmert promised to release hundreds of detainees after Shalit is released from captivity.
The Palestinian President said that he expects the current Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to fulfill Olmert's promise.
Abbas said that Olmert released detainees on two occasions as a gesture of good will in order to advance peace talks, and that when he asked him to release more detainees, Olmert reportedly said that “such a release can only happen when Shalit is freed”.
According to the report, Olmert told Abbas that once the Shalit deal is concluded, and the soldier returns home safe, he will release detainees that are not considered “dangerous”.
Now, Abbas is expecting Netanyahu to make Olmert's promise come to light.
Abbas told the Times that he discussed the issue earlier this week with the U.S. administration, adding that U.S.. Envoy, David Hale, and the U.S.. Counsel General, Daniel Rubinstein, told him six month ago that Obama will make sure Netanyahu grants Abbas confidence building measures, Israeli Ynet News reported.
Abba reportedly asked about what kind of measures the U.S. is talking about, and Rubinstein said the measures would include easing the siege on Gaza, removing West Bank roadblocks, and releasing Palestinian detainees.
Abbas initially rejected the Israeli offer fearing that Israel would use it to waste time during negotiations by just discussing this issue.
The U.S.. envoys then returned to the region two or three times and met with Abbas, asking him to accept the offer telling him that “its is free and he doesn't have to do anything”, but after he accepted it, the offer was never implemented, the Ynet reported.
But the Palestinian President does not believe that Netanyahu will respect the offer of Olmert, adding that he will contact him in the coming days to ask him if he would fulfill it.
“I will not argue with him, or hold any negotiations, he can either fulfill Olmert's promise or reject it”, Abbas added, “If he doesn't believe me, he only needs to turn to meeting minutes, as it is all written there by his colleagues”.
477 Palestinian detainees were released this week as part of the Prisoner-swap deal that secured the return of captured Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, to his family. Israel will be releasing 550 more detainees as part of its obligations in the second phase of the deal.
Mahmoud Abbas and his Fateh movement, the rival of Hamas, had nothing to do with the case of Shalit or the indirect talks that eventually led to the deal.
Israel is still holding captive more than 5300 Palestinian detainees, including 22 elected legislators.
The Ministry of Detainees in Gaza reported that said that number of detainees imprisoned since before the Oslo peace agreement of 1993 has dropped from 299 to 126. The list of long-serving detainees (who have been imprisoned for twenty or more years) has dropped, after the swap-deal, from 145 to 51 detainees. This includes twelve from the 1948 territories, four from Jerusalem, seven from the Gaza Strip, and 28 from the West Bank.
The number of detainees who have been imprisoned by Israeli for 25 years or more has dropped from 45 to 22. Four detainees who have spent more than thirty years behind bars were released under the deal.
There are 22 elected legislators, and all of the remaining nine female detainees were not released under the deal. Egypt, acting as an intermediary, is currently trying to secure the release of the remaining female prisoners in the second phase of the deal.
There are 280 children who are still imprisoned by Israel in violation to International Law. Israel is also holding captive five residents from the Gaza Strip, under what it dubs as “Illegitimate combatants” as none of them were part of the swap.
International Middle East Media Center
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